runs in your browserno upload · no signup

extract the last frame from a video

drop a video, jump to the end, download the final frame at full resolution. free, no signup — and the file never leaves your browser.

open frame grabber — drop your video

01 / howhow to do it

  1. drop your video onto frame grabber (mp4, webm, mov & anything your browser plays).
  2. press last ⏭ — the tool seeks to the final decodable frame.
  3. pick a format: jpg with a quality slider, lossless png, or webp.
  4. hit download — the frame is saved at the video's native resolution.

02 / whywhy this works

the last frame of a clip is surprisingly hard to get right: editors often export a frame early, screenshots pick up player controls, and most online extractors upload your footage to a server and stamp a watermark on the result. frame grabber decodes the video locally with your browser's own video engine, seeks to the final decodable frame and hands it to you as a clean image.

you get the frame at the video's native resolution — 4k video, 4k frame. need the opening shot too? the first + last · zip button saves both in one click, and batch mode does it for a whole folder of clips.

if you make ai videos, the last frame is the bridge between generations: feed it back into seedance, kling, veo, sora or runway as the start image and the next clip continues seamlessly — see the per-model guides below.

03 / faqfrequently asked

is it really the last frame?
yes — the tool seeks to the final decodable frame of the file (a few milliseconds before the container's stated end, which is where the last real frame lives) and renders exactly what the video shows there.
does the video get uploaded?
no. the file is opened locally by your browser and never touches a server — there is no size limit beyond your device's memory, and nothing to delete afterwards.
what formats can i export?
jpg with adjustable quality, lossless png, or webp. the resolution always matches the source video.

04 / moremore guides